1. Introduction and Preliminaries
Let
X be an infinite dimensional complex Banach space. A function
is an
n-homogeneous polynomial if there exists a symmetric
n-linear map
defined on the Cartesian power
to
such that
The mapping
is called
n-linear form associated with P and is necessary and unique because of the well-known polarization formula (see, e.g., p. 4 [
1]). The Banach space of all continuous
n-homogeneous polynomials on
X with respect to the norm
is denoted by
For us the following version of the
polarization inequality is important (p. 8 [
1]).
where
are positive integers with
A continuous function
is said to be an
entire analytic function (or just
entire function) if its restriction on any finite dimensional subspace is analytic. The space of all entire analytic functions on
X is denoted by
For every entire function
f there exists a sequence of continuous
n-homogeneous polynomials (so-called
Taylor polynomials) such that
and the series converges for every
Here
is a constant. The Taylor series expansion (
2) uniformly converges on the open ball
centered at zero with radius
where
The radius is called the radius of uniform convergence of f or the radius of boundedness of f because the ball is the largest open ball at zero such that f is bounded on it. If then f is bounded on all bounded subsets of X and is called a function of bounded type. The set of all functions of bounded type on X is denoted by
It is known that
is a Fréchet algebra with respect to the topology of uniform convergence on bounded sets. Algebras
were considered first in [
2,
3] and studied by many authors for various Banach spaces
A polynomial
P on
X is called a polynomial of
finite type if it is a finite sum of finite products of linear functionals and constants. We denote by
the smallest closed subalgebra of
containing the space of all
n-homogeneous polynomials
In particular,
is the closure of the space of finite type polynomials in
In the general case,
if
For example, it is so for
(see [
4] for details).
We say that a function
f is an entire function of
unbounded type if
It is known that for given weak*-null sequences
, which always exists (see p. 157 [
5]) the function
is an entire function of unbounded type on
It is easy to see that the Taylor polynomials
of
f are polynomials of finite type. In this paper we consider the following natural question.
Question 1. Let be subspaces of Under which conditions is there a function such that ?
In
Section 2 we obtain some general results on entire functions of unbounded type. In particular, we show that if
X is such that
for some
then there exists a function
such that all its Taylor polynomials are in
Also, we establish some sufficient conditions for a function
f to be in
In
Section 3 the obtained results are applied to construct examples of symmetric analytic functions of unbounded type on
These examples can be considered as generalizations of the example, constructed in [
6] on
In addition, the paper contains some discussions and open questions.
For details on analytic functions of bounded type we refer the reader to [
1,
5,
7]. Entire analytic functions of unbounded type were investigated in [
8,
9,
10]. Symmetric analytic functions on Banach spaces were studied in [
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18].
2. General Results
Evidently, the set of entire functions of unbounded type is not a linear space. Moreover, the following example shows that the product of two functions of unbounded type is not necessarily a function of unbounded type because there are invertible analytic functions of unbounded type.
Example 1. Let or for and be the coordinate functionals multiplied by So the function f of the form (3) is of unbounded type. We setClearly, because it is unbounded on the bounded setOn the other hand,and so However, the product of g and equals which is bounded. Note that
surprisedly contains infinite dimension linear subspaces and subalgebras without the zero vector [
19].
The following proposition shows that the set of entire functions of unbounded type has some kind of ideal property.
Proposition 1. Letand for some constants and Then Proof. Let us show that
g is well-defined on
Note first that since
is well-defined on
the series
is convergent on
Indeed, for every fixed
the function
is in
and so the power series
is absolutely convergent. It is true, in particular, for
For every
To prove that
g is analytic but not of bounded type we need to show that the radius of boundedness
of
g at zero satisfies
One can check that
So
That is,
and so
□
Corollary 1. Let X be such that for some Then there exists a function such that all are in
Theorem 1. Let us suppose that there is a dense subset and a sequence of polynomials such that for every there exists such that for every for all and Then Proof. Note first that
and so
Thus
g is locally bounded and if it is well-defined on
then it belongs to
Let us show that
g is well-defined on
Let
and
such that
Let
Then
For every
we set
For the fixed
is an entire function of
y and its
j-homogeneous Taylor polynomial is
Taking into account inequality (
1) we have
So, using the Stirling asymptotic formula for
we have
It is easy to check (c.f. Lemma 2 [
6]) that
So the radius of boundedness of
is equal to
Thus
is defined at
y because
Since
g is well-defined at
□
3. Symmetric Analytic Functions of Unbounded Type
Let
X be a complex Banach space and
be a semigroup of isometric operators on
A polynomial
is said to be
-
symmetric if it is invariant with respect to the action of
that is,
for every
-symmetric polynomials from the general point of view were considered in [
12,
13].
Symmetric polynomials on
can be defined as
-symmetric polynomials if
is the group of permutation of the standard basis vectors in
Due to [
20] we know that polynomials
form an
algebraic basis in the algebra of all symmetric polynomials on
(here
is the smallest integer that is greater than or equal to
For the case
we can use, also, another algebraic basis
In [
15] it is proved that
Let
It is easy to check that polynomials
satisfy the condition of Theorem 1 if
is the subspace
of all finite sequences in
In [
6] there is a direct proof that the following function
belongs to
We will prove it for more general situation. For a given positive integer number
s we denote
Theorem 2. If then and polynomialssatisfy the condition of Theorem 1 for In particular, Proof. If
then for every
we have
So
for every
Thus
is continuous and well-defined on
Let
Then, for
because it is a linear span of elements
where
So
satisfies the condition of Theorem 1 for
□
From Theorem 3 it follows that there exists an entire function of unbounded type
on
such that its Taylor polynomials
are symmetric. From [
4] it follows, also that
for
Using similar arguments like in Theorem 3, it is possible to construct examples of separately symmetric and entire block-symmetric functions on a finite Cartesian power of
For the definition and properties of
separately symmetric analytic functions we refer the reader to [
21].
Block symmetric polynomials on a Cartesian power of
were studied in [
22,
23]. Here we consider the case of
Each vector
x in
is a bounded number sequence
So we can consider symmetric polynomials on
that is, invariant polynomials with respect to all permutations
In [
17] it is proved that only constants are symmetric polynomials on
However,
admits polynomials that are invariant with respect to the subgroup of finite permutations. Such polynomials are called
finitely symmetric. A permutation
is
finite if there is
such that
for every
The following example shows that there exists a finitely symmetric entire function of unbounded type on
Example 2. Let us fix a presentation of the set of positive integers as a disjoint unionLet be a free ultrafilter on for every We denote bySetIt is clear that are nontrivial continuous n-homogeneous polynomials forLet us defineLetfor some fixed constants andIn other words, if then the function has just a finite number of different values. By the definition of one can check that if thenSince Ω is dense in polynomials satisfy the condition of Theorem 1. In addition, polynomials are finitely symmetric because all functionals are evidently so. 4. Discussion, Conclusions and Open Questions
As a result, we can say that various classes of polynomials on Banach spaces support entire analytic functions of unbounded type. However, does an entire symmetric analytic function of unbounded type exist on
? A function on
is
symmetric if it is invariant with respect to measuring and preserving automorphisms of the interval
Polynomials
form an algebraic basis in the space of all symmetric polynomials on
[
18]. It would be interesting, also, to construct an entire supersymmetric function of unbounded type on
where
Let us recall that a polynomial on
is
supersymmetric if it is an algebraic combination of polynomials
(see [
24]).
In a more general case, let
be a sequence of algebraically independent polynomials on a Banach space
Let us denote by
the minimal subalgebra of
containing all polynomials in
Algebras
were studied in [
16,
25]. It is natural to ask:
Question 2. Under which conditions on does there exist an entire functions f of unbounded type on X such that its Taylor polynomials are in ?
Note that algebras of symmetric (block-symmetric, supersymmetric) analytic functions of bounded types are partial cases of Let us consider the following example.
Example 3. Let for andIf then polynomials in support a function of unbounded type, for example, However, if the function f is no longer defined on the whole space. Question 3. Does there exist an entire function of unbounded type on with Taylor polynomials in where is as in Example 3?
Let us make a note about products of functions of unbounded type. In [
19] it is proved that if
f is a function of unbounded type on
X of the form (
3) and
P is a nonzero continuous polynomial on
then
Example 1 shows that the product of two functions of unbounded type is not necessarily of unbounded type.
Question 4. Does a nonzero function and exist such that ?
By the following example we can see that the answer to this question is positive for the
real case but we do not know the answer for the complex case. Analytic functions of unbounded type on real Banach spaces were studied in [
26].
Example 4. Let f be a function of unbounded type defined by (3) on a real Banach space We setClearly However,has a bounded range and so is of bounded type.